To start with, the goods and services tax (GST) will have an assessee
base significantly smaller than the combined universe of central
excise, service tax and state VAT, the three principal taxes to collapse
into GST. The shrinking of the base has primarily to do with the GST
turnover threshold (Rs 20 lakh), which has kept lakhs of the existing
service tax and VAT assessees out of the proposed comprehensive indirect
tax’s ambit.
So, Goods and Services Tax Network (GSTN) chairman Navin Kumar told
FE, the 60 lakh GSTN registrations so far is closer to potential than
many would think. The excise/VAT/service tax base is around 80 lakh at
present and two-thirds of these units won’t have to pay GST given the
higher threshold. That shows how lakhs of small businesses have
scrambled to join the new system, even as their tax liability will be
nil. The lure is obviously the input tax credit system and this,
analysts said, shows how GST will eventually help broaden the tax base.
While over 80% of the VAT and central excise assessees have migrated
to GSTN till April 30, only 45% for service tax assessee have joined and
a significant number of VAT assessees too have kept themselves out.
Migration for VAT assessees started in November last year but the
same was opened for central excise and service tax in the middle of
January, which gave units lesser time to migrate. Even though we don’t
exactly know the reasons for the taxpayers’ preference (to not
register), the lower level of migration could be due to the higher
exemption limit," Kumar said.
On the revenue front, the government has nothing to worry as
taxpayers with turnover above Rs 1.5 crore contribute 90% of the
indirect tax revenue, even as 93% of the service tax assessees and 85%
of the VAT taxpayers have a turnover below that level.
At present, there are around 65 lakh value-added tax assessees, 26
lakh units that pay service tax and 4 lakh that pay excise duty. The
exemption threshold for service tax is Rs10 lakh, for excise Rs 1.5
crore, and in the case of state VAT, the entry level is between Rs 5
lakh and Rs 10 lakh across states.
Although GSTN is a not-for-profit company, Kumar said that it is not
barred from earning revenue from the services it renders. GSTN, he
added, would be paid some Rs 550 crore annually by the Centre and states
(it levies no user fee for industry), which is roughly equal to Rs 100
per registrant per month.
"Initially, we had proposed that whoever uses the system should pay.
However, the states governments didn’t agree with this and so it was
decided that government will pay on behalf of the users on the basis of
bills raised on the number of users," Kumar said. Currently, majority
stake of the company is owned by private and public financial
institutions with 51% equity, while state and central governments
together hold 49%.
Additionally, as the company generates enough data over 12 months or
so, GSTN will be able to employ application to detect tax evasion and
fraud in the system. "You can profile a particular tax payer with data
analytics using machine language, and detect tax evasion. This is also a
part of the GSTN mandate," Kumar added. While the window for GSTN
migration was discontinued on May 1 for technical reasons, a short
migration window will be opened closer to July 1 for more units to join.
The system is currently being tested in the beta phase and it will
soon simulate real-world transactions, assuming a user base of 80 lakh
generating monthly invoices of 300 crore.
11 May 2017, 01:46 PM